Ukiyo-e - The Floating World ('ukiyo') was an expression of the new economy
and social ambitions of the common townspeople of the Edo period (1615-1868).
It was, specifically, a world of play and entertainment in Japan's three
main cities (Edo [now called Tokyo], Osaka, and Kyoto). It could also
be argued that this "world" was also a state of mind or an
ethos, a characteristic spirit of the 'chônin' ("persons
of the town"). Although the activities and occupations varied,
the participants focused particularly upon the pleasure quarters and
entertainment districts. These areas of play were ritualized milieu
offering escape from the constraints that the samurai estate forced
upon the growing and increasingly more economically powerful merchant
class.
The
Floating World embraced much of what constituted everyday life, but
it especially celebrated the insider's world of the courtesan, kabuki
and puppet theaters, teahouses, specialty clothing and accessories shops,
and festivals. Broadly speaking, traditional woodblock prints ('ukiyo-e')
depicting the Floating World were an artistic expression of the new-found
wealth and plebeian tastes of the merchant class (all proscribed within
certain limits defined periodically by the shogun's government, called
the 'bakufu'). In all its imaginative variations, this world became
the primary subject matter of 'ukiyo-e' prints and paintings during
the Edo and Meiji (1868-1912) periods.
e
(prints) Ukiyo (floating) The term 'ukiyo-e' is composed of three Japanese
characters: The first two are shown on the left. The top character is
read as 'uki', which means "floating," "cheerful,"
or "frivolous." The second character reads 'yo', which means
"world," "generation," "age," "era,"
or "reign." The third character (shown at the right) reads
'e' and means "picture," "drawing, " "painting,"
or "print." Thus the standard translation of 'ukiyo-e' is
"Pictures of the Floating World." In its usual sense 'ukiyo'
suggested "transitory world," but it also had such connotations
as "everyday world," "present reality," or "world
of the here and now." In ukiyo-e prints and paintings there was
a special, formalized reality, a combination of stylized artistic conventions
shared by most artists and the personal reality of the individual artist,
which constituted imaginative retellings of life in the Floating World.
Ukiyo
(Sorrowful) There was another character used to write 'uki', which means
"sorrow," "grief," "distress, " or "melancholy."
When that alternate character was used in the compound "ukiyo"
(shown on the left), it meant "sorrowful world" and thus had
Buddhist or religious connotations. As with the earlier term for 'ukiyo',
it also implied a "transitory world," but with the implication
that the present "reality" was ephemeral, or an illusion,
a preparatory stage before a more meaningful afterlife. Many writers
have linked the two ways of writing 'ukiyo' as two opposites of the
same perception of transitory reality, the religious emphasis being
on the sorrow of daily life, the merchant emphasis on temporary escape
and enjoyment. Neither view denied the pessimism experienced in an ephemeral
world. Other critics argue, however, that the two terms were not actually
used interchangeably at first, but became conflated only later in the
mid-18th century after 'ukiyo-e' prints and paintings had already become
popular. The debate continues over just how closely linked were the
two ways of writing 'ukiyo'.
©1999-2001
by John Fiorillo |
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